Johnson secures third win of the season at Kansas
May 10, 2015
By Jim Pedley
NASCAR Wire Service
KANSAS
CITY, Kan. – Thanks to a brief but wild Kansas spring storm and the
long delay it produced, Jimmie Johnson on Sunday became the first Sprint
Cup driver to win a race on Mother’s Day since 2007.
Johnson,
who is pursuing a record-tying seventh NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
championship this season, held off Kevin Harvick over the final six laps
to win Sunday morning’s SpongeBob SquarePants 400 at Kansas Speedway.
Johnson’s
victory – which was recorded just after midnight local time because of a
delay of 2 hours and 16 minutes – was his third of the season and his
third at the 1.5-mile Kansas oval.
“It
was a long, hard night,” Johnson, who led just 10 laps and who spun out
unassisted early in the race, said in Victory Lane. “Once we got up
front, we were able to hang on.”
Reminded
about what day it was when he finally took the checkered flag, Johnson
said, “I just want to wish Happy Mother’s Day to all the moms out
there. My mother and especially my wife Chani (Johnson, wife),
hopefully she is still awake. I wish she was here. I wish my girls
were here too, but I will be home tonight and we will have some fun
tomorrow.”
Harvick, who led 53 laps, finished second in his Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet.
Third was Johnson’s Hendrick Motorsports teammate, Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Fourth was another Hendrick driver, Jeff Gordon, while pole-sitter Joey Logano was fifth in a Team Penske Ford.
The
victory was the 73rd of the six-time champion’s career. It came thanks
to some late-race strategizing by teams who had cars and drivers at the
front of the field.
Harvick
appeared to be headed toward his third victory of the season as the
laps wound down after he took the lead on a restart lap with 55 laps to
go. The defending series champion had a lead of over 1 second with 14
laps to go and nobody appeared fast enough to close that gap let alone
get around him.
But with 12 laps to go, Ricky Stenhouse Jr.’s Roush Fenway Racing Ford clipped the outside wall to bring out the final caution.
Harvick
and all but four others – Johnson, Earnhardt Jr., Kurt Busch and Jeff
Gordon – pitted as they were iffy on fuel. Harvick also opted to take
two right-side tires.
After
the restart with six to go, the race became a three-driver affair as
Johnson, Earnhardt and Harvick, who restarted sixth, edged away from the
field.
The
decision by Johnson and crew chief Chad Knaus turned out to be a winner
– even though they had less rubber than did Harvick. Harvick never got
close enough to Johnson to take a final shot at a pass.
Johnson said the decision to not pit was a split-second, gut-feeling kind of thing and it was mostly his.
“I
could tell he (crew chief Chad Knaus) was having a hard time making the
decision,” Johnson said. “I’m kind of running through the events in my
mind. We have two wins, we are locked in the Chase, and we are here to
win a race, let’s gamble. Let’s go for it. Sure enough it paid off. A
few more laps I think the No. 4 (Harvick) would have had me. He was
awfully strong. Obviously being on right side tires would have been an
advantage for him. We had just enough time to get this Lowe’s Chevrolet
to Victory Lane. Just very proud of the team and the effort that has
gone into it. We have great racecars. I wish we would qualify a little
better on Friday’s that would make life a lot easier for us. We have a
very fast racecar.”
Harvick said he wasn’t mad about his team’s decision to pit.
“I’ve
been on the other side of this deal where the cars aren’t running good
and you don’t have a chance to win,” he said. “We won a championship on
pit calls and tires and everything fell our way. We’ve had a lot of
things go our way and we’ve had a lot of things work.”
Harvick did insist, however, he had the faster car regardless of the outcome.
“He
wasn’t that strong,” Harvick said of Johnson. “He was just trying to
run right in front of our car so for those first few laps when you’re
pushing like that it really takes the air off the front of the car and
it gets the chatter in the front end and it snaps around. But that was
the strategy they took and it worked out for them.”
Perhaps
the most bummed driver as a result of the finish was Furniture Row
Racing’s Martin Truex Jr. His No. 78 Chevrolet was clearly the fastest
on the track for the vast majority of the race. It led a race-best 95
laps.
But
his team felt it needed to pit for fuel during the final caution. On
the restart, it became obvious they had made the wrong call.
Truex finished ninth.
“We
should have either stayed out or took new tires,” Truex said. “We
probably did the worst thing you could have done there with just staying
out and getting gas only because we ended up being the last guy with no
tires. Everybody else behind us had two and they ate us up on the
restart.”
No comments:
Post a Comment